![]() As you can see, a single picture doesn’t do it justice (and you need a large monitor to view it all), so you can better explore the full structure at the link above.īIAN 8.0 Service Landscape as Value Chain ![]() A structure organizing these elements in the form of a value chain is shown below. The Service Landscape itself is a deep structure of business areas (Groupings in ArchiMate language), consisting of business domains that in turn contain service domains, both modeled as Capabilities. As you can see, it also uses the ArchiMate Capability concept. On top of this Service Landscape sits the Capability Landscape, the top level of which is shown below. The interactions between the service domains realize the business activities that make a bank a bank. Such a building block is called a service domain and is best represented in the ArchiMate language using the Capability concept. This consists of discrete non-overlapping building blocks of business capacity that exchange services. The core of the BIAN reference model is its Service Landscape. ![]() BIAN version 8.0 has therefore been expressed in the ArchiMate® 3 language. It stands to reason that such a standard reference model should itself be expressed in a standard notation, to foster its adoption, and BIAN recognized this need. This provides a comprehensive model of the business capabilities, business scenarios, service domains and business objects used in banking and other financial services. Recently, the Banking Industry Architecture Network (BIAN) published version 8.0 of its financial industry reference architecture. By Patrick Derde, Managing Partner, Consultant and Trainer of Envizion, and Marc Lankhorst, Managing Consultant and Chief Technology Evangelist at BiZZdesign
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